FEMALES’ ACT SCORES TOP MALES’ FOR FIRST TIME;NUMBER OF STUDENTS TAKING ACT DECLINES AS

MANY MORE COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES DROP ADMISSIONS EXAMS;

980+ SCHOOLS ARE NOW TEST-OPTIONAL

Young women in the high school class of 2017 scored higher on the ACT exam than their male counterparts for the first time. The average Composite ACT score for females, 21.1 out of 36, is slightly better than the 21.0 posted by males. According to Bob Schaeffer, Public Education Director of the National Center for Fair & Open Testing (FairTest), “Finally this year, ACT results are consistent with measures of real academic performance, which show that females earn higher grades than males in both high school and college when matched for identical courses.”

The number of high school graduates taking the ACT in 2017 declined by 3% from the test volume for the class of 2016. That's the first year-to-year decline in a decade and a half and the biggest percentage drop since 1990-1991, a period in which the ACT overtook the SAT as the nation's most widely administered college admissions exam (http://www.fairtest.org/sites/default/files/ACT-SAT-Annual-Test-Takers-Chart_1.pdf). A FairTest analysis reveals that average ACT scores are generally flat over the past five years. Schaeffer noted, “This shows that K-12 test-and-punish policies have not improved readiness for higher education, at least as measured by these exams.”